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Response Journal: Reading Lesson #1

11/19/2013

1 Comment

 

Students Must
choose The Books

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I am so heartened to read this article, which appeared in my NCTE mailbox this evening: 

"The Most Important Lesson Schools Can Teach Kids About Reading: It's Fun" in The Atlantic, by Jeremy Wilhelm and Michael Smith.

These two college professors have co-authored a book encouraging teachers to design student-choice reading programs. This article summarizes their viewpoint, and I couldn't agree more!


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I have made a concerted effort this year to focus on student choice in reading, including these techniques:

a) Having students write about their reading goals.

b) Requiring them to write literary letters about their books. For more on this, click this link to the Library of Congress Contest.

c) Filling my bookshelves with a variety of books and turning it into a small library.

d) Saying this: "You can always read in my classroom."


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I've used a variety of methods to introduce new titles to introduce new titles to my students. 

a)Doing whips around the room to ask about outside reading; 


b) Going to the library for book talks (pictured).

c) Discussing books and posting book reviews on our class Facebook page.

d) As Penny Kittle suggests - having them maintain a list of "Books to Read".

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I've changed the culture of my classroom to make outside reading part of the mainstream expectations and curriculum.

Most importantly, the summer reading assignment was built entirely around encouraging students to select their own books.

This was the first year the English department tried this concept, and it was a rousing success!


Click here for the blog entry I wrote explaining the summer assignment.


That summer assignment set the tone and expectations for the whole year!

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The Atlantic article points out how policy-makers emphasize reading for its "pragmatic" and "utilitarian" benefits.

Educators hardly get a moment to emphasize reading for the fun of it, for the variety of "pleasures" -- which Wilhelm and Smith analyze -- it brings people. 


That's too bad. It's important to create student-choice in both their writing and their reading lessons. I do that through my usual methods: goal-setting, reflection, and mind-mapping.
Of course, it doesn't have to all be student-choice. I have found that I can do both: power up an independent reading program AND still do a few whole-class selections (Gatsby, Macbeth, Frederick Douglass) during the year.

The focus group for Wilhelm and Smith was eighth-graders, and I think most people tend to think only of our younger students when discussing our methods of teaching reading and writing. The truth is that if it works in 4th grade, it works in 12th grade.
1 Comment
Karen Levy
11/19/2013 11:35:25 pm

"The joy of getting lost in a book." This is the first line in the article you posted. This is what we need to promote instead of Common Core and all that other stuff if we are sincere about educating our students.
I met you at the Summer Film Seminar.
I was the librarian and the cousin of Alan Gross, who has a 15 year sentence in a Cuban Prison.

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    Blog Author:
    Daniel Weinstein

    I teach AP Language and Creative Writing at Great Neck South High School on Long Island. 

    Teaching philosophies: Student-centered. Collaborative. Goal-setting. Coaching. Divergent thinking. Portfolio. Writing as therapy. Take Risks! Find your voice. Experiment! Freewrite. Poetry. Memoir. Editing. Layers. Deadlines. Frontload. Rap and hip-hop. Expository technique. Drawing. Art. Magic Markers. Mind Maps. Publishing. Music. Cellphones. Ipods. Wikipedia. Twitter. Facebook. Stay modern. Stay open-minded. Keep learning. 

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